The Robert E. Howard Days organisers have the event’s 2024 hour-by-hour schedule available.
Howard Days 2024 schedule
16 Tuesday Jan 2024
Posted in REH
16 Tuesday Jan 2024
Posted in REH
The Robert E. Howard Days organisers have the event’s 2024 hour-by-hour schedule available.
16 Tuesday Jan 2024
Posted in Kittee Tuesday, Lovecraftian arts
An early 1970s Lovecraft book cover I’d not seen before, complete with kitties from Ulthar. De Droomwereld Van Kadath (1972) from Holland. Translates as ‘The Dreamworld of Kadath’, the book being a translation of The Dreamquest of Unknown Kadath.
Looking at the fungi also on the cover, I’m wondering if they also popped in a translation of the “Fungi from Yuggoth”?
15 Monday Jan 2024
Posted in New books, Scholarly works
The Pulp Super-Fan super-swoops, cape rippling in the breeze, down onto the new book L’Affaire Barlow: H.P. Lovecraft and the Battle for His Literary Legacy…
This is a well-researched work, and I look forward to further works by this author, who is working on a biography of Barlow. […] The whole story about this affair is pretty sad as many people behaved badly. They pulled in others they shouldn’t have, attacked not only Barlow but others, and led to several proposed publications never seeing the light of day. Worse, some of those are lost, as the only copies were destroyed in a fire.
Meanwhile, down in Mexico the Tabasco Herald compares Tolkien and Lovecraft. I thought this was a review of the new Italian book on the topic, but it seems not.
14 Sunday Jan 2024
Posted in Odd scratchings, Scholarly works
Curtis Wright Maps has a copy of Off the Ancient Track: A Lovecraftian Guide to New England and Adjacent New York and offers some nice interior scans of the $150 item. This is the first edition, not the revised edition.
13 Saturday Jan 2024
Posted in Lovecraftian arts
British Lovecraftians of a certain age will fondly recall the Panther paperback editions. The cover-artist for two of these is having a exhibition of his 1970s covers, in his home town. Bob Fowke did the covers for the books The Horror in the Burying Ground and The Horror in the Museum.
Also for Poul Anderson’s A Midsummer Tempest, one of Poul Anderson’s English and northern fantasies. I had wondered who did that cover, and thought it might have been one of the Ruralists.
His “exhibition of 70s sci-fi art” runs for three days only, part of the Open Studios in the town of Bishop’s Castle, Shropshire, on the border between England and Wales and about 40 miles west of Birmingham. The dates are 16th, 17th & 18th February 2024.
12 Friday Jan 2024
Posted in Picture postals
A suitably seasonal ‘picture postals from Lovecraft’ post this week. Lovecraft moved into his under-heated “dismal hovel” of a room at 169 Clinton Street on the edge of Red Hook, on the 31st December (he was then “half moved”) – 1st January 1925 (“moved final load”). In that he was lucky, for if only a little later he would have run smack into the first of the “Worst Snowstorms In New York History”, beginning with two days of “howling gusts” though the city’s canyons on 2rd-3rd…
“New York City was the unwelcome recipient of 27.4 inches of snow [in the month], the most ever recorded for any January up to that time. … A relentless snowstorm that lasted two days occurred from January 2rd-3rd [and landed 12 inches on the city]. On January 12th the city required 12,000 shovelmen to tackle another snowstorm that clogged the streets. January 20th New York City was hit with two blizzards in one day. January 27th more snow fell and then the coup de grace; the giant storm on January 30th that affected the metropolitan area.
Lovecraft’s letter home, his first in January, seems all but oblivious to this. Though his 1925 Diary laconically has “snowstorm” on the 2nd. But possibly he did not wish to alarm his aunts. Also, he was well used to the severe New England winters of the time, and knew how to wrap up if he had to go out. On the 3rd he was out meeting Kirk and the gang at a cafeteria.
Atlantic Avenue, a few blocks east along from the Atlantic Avenue – Clinton St. intersection where his favoured grocery was. But nevertheless the picture evokes Lovecraft venturing out to “send express package” which he did first thing on 5th January.
After all, despite the duration and windiness of the great storm, its 12 inches of snow was a trifle by the weather standards of the period. And it would have been drifted and banked heavily by the extreme winds.
More curious is the 12th January, re: the above “On January 12th the city required 12,000 shovelmen to tackle another snowstorm that clogged the streets”. Lovecraft’s letters mention this date and “to Loveman’s over the icy pavement”, and his Diary has himself “visit[ing] SL [Loveman] in ice storm” and then… he goes strolling over the frozen Brooklyn Bridge with Kirk!
After leaving SL at his airy domicile, and starting on a walk over the Brooklyn Bridge & up through Chinatown, Kirk and I decided to surprise Loveman with a birthday gift…
Not impossible I guess, if thousands of “shovelmen” had been at work at clearing it since 5am, the pedestrian walkways had been gritted, and the storm had just passed leaving a sparkling day and few people to crowd the bridge and obstruct strolling. According to the Diary he reaches and “walk[s] Chinatown” with Kirk. Not bad, for a cold-averse old gent!
Brooklyn Bridge in snow, by Max Kuehne.
And finally here is a picture by Lena Gurr of Brooklyn, possibly made in the 1920s (she was was roughly the same age as Lovecraft), evoking the more salubrious snowy side-streets of Brooklyn once they were made walkable again…
Again, the picture evokes Lovecraft, this time with one of ‘the gang’.
11 Thursday Jan 2024
Posted in Scholarly works
New to me, Beasts of the Deep: Sea Creatures in Popular Culture (2018) from Indiana University Press. Accompanied a year later by its shelf companion Beasts of The Forest: Denizens of the Dark Woods (2019).
10 Wednesday Jan 2024
Posted in Odd scratchings
Passes and Tickets for NecronomiCon Providence, on sale 12th January 2024, for the event in August in Providence.
Early promo art for the event, by Maegan LeMay.
09 Tuesday Jan 2024
Posted in Scholarly works
Three new articles from overseas.
A new open-access article on sanity in Lovecraft’s “Dagon”, although the article is in Portuguse.
The videogame Bloodbourne is commonly said to be very Lovecraftian, almost in an exemplary manner. Andrii Isakov tests that claim in his new open-access article in a Ukrainian journal. More musing on the topic at “Bloodborne through the lenses of Todorov’s theory of equilibrium”.
In a Russian journal, a new article examining ancestral roots and the re-positioning of sacred symbolism in Lovecraft’s “Innsmouth”.
08 Monday Jan 2024
Posted in Odd scratchings
New on Archive.org, a microfilm run of The Author & Journalist 1916-1969 magazine (initially The Student Writer, to 1923). November 1952 has one of a series giving August Derleth’s memories of “Becoming a writer”. In the same issue “New Pulps”…
“The pulp magazines, booming again [after the post-war shortages and disruption, and] … science-fiction is hot”
There are also short summary articles on the trade, such as “The Pulp Situation” in March 1941, which writes… “The terror and horror mystery period is over” due to the war.
Includes the 1948 “Lovecraft on Story Construction”, via Rimel.
Doubtless there’s more to be found in such a long run, and one can search across the full-text. The run is “to borrow” only.
Popping rather more fully into public availability… the entire digitized copyright-expired artwork of the British Isles. A UK Court of Appeal ruling… “confirms that museums do not have valid copyright in photographs of (two-dimensional) works which are themselves out of copyright. It means these photographs are in the public domain, and free to use.” Feel free to use for book covers, AI training, t-shirts, etc.
07 Sunday Jan 2024
Posted in REH, Scholarly works
Released at the end of November 2023, The Dark Man: Journal of Robert E. Howard and Pulp Studies (13.2). Howard Works has the TOCs, which reveal no Lovecraft material.
Also in Howard news, Dark Worlds Quarterly has the new and richly illustrated article surveying “The Inkers of John Buscema’s Savage Sword”.
06 Saturday Jan 2024
Posted in New books, Scholarly works
Newly spotted, L’Affaire Barlow: H.P. Lovecraft and the Battle for His Literary Legacy (November 2023), with a foreword by Ken Faig Jr.
In L’Affaire Barlow, the author examines primary source material in detail never attempted before, clearly explaining how dangerously close Lovecraft’s work was to being litigated into obscurity. Bruised egos, personal vendettas, and Machiavellian plots abound, making control of the Lovecraft literary estate read like a tale from one of the pulp magazines. Lovecraft designated Robert Barlow as his literary executor. Barlow created the Lovecraft archives at Brown University even as a campaign was waged to wrest control of Lovecraft’s work from him. Barlow’s reputation was destroyed among the Lovecraft circle. It was only after his premature death that his unyielding guardianship of Lovecraft’s legacy was fully understood despite the plot against him. L’Affaire Barlow is the story of Robert Barlow’s quest to preserve the Old Gent from Providence for the ages.